Header: Experience Your Neighbor's Faith
Weekly Update
May 11, 2010 
Greetings!

As nature bursts forth, join us TOMORROW to find out "What Islam Teaches About Protecting the Planet" with author and organizer Ibrahim Abdul-Matin.   

Then on May 26, in an evening Co-Sponsored by the Center for Inquiry NYC, writer and activist Austin Dacey will lead a Living Room event on "Music's Lessons for Mystics: Three Songs and a Talk on Secular Transcendence."

Want to know more? Read on below...
Living Room
Green Deen:
What Islam Teaches About Protecting the Planet

Ibrahim Abdul-MatinTOMORROW
Wednesday, May 12, 2010


6 pm Doors, 7 pm Program

Intersections, 274 5th Ave
Btwn 29th and 30th Sts

With Ibrahim Abdul-Matin

From childhood, Ibrahim Abdul-Matin was taught that "the Earth is a Mosque," leading him to his belief that the planet is a sacred place where prayer and worship happen and therefore, we are responsible for protecting every aspect of it. You are invited to an interactive evening with the author of "Green Deen: What Islam Teaches About Protecting the Planet", Ibrahim Abdul-Matin. The evening will include his story of becoming an environmental justice activist and organizer, discussion of Islamic scriptural passages that describe a faith-based mandate to protect the planet, role plays and story telling on how faith relates to waste, water, watts (energy), and food.

Ibrahim Abdul-Matin is the author of "Green Deen: What Islam Teaches About Protecting the Planet", coming to you in Fall 2010 by Berrett-Koehler publishers. He is currently a Senior Policy Advisor in the New York City Mayor's Office on issues of long term planning and sustainability. Most recently, Ibrahim was a consultant for Green City Force, a green jobs training program for young people of color living in economically depressed neighborhoods of Brooklyn. He is also a member of the Interfaith Leaders for Environmental Justice and frequently represents the environmental viewpoint on faith-based panels. His interest in environmental justice began as Director of Youth Programs with the Prospect Park Alliance where he was instrumental in establishing the Brooklyn Academy of Science and the Environment, a charter school by New Visions. His skill working with youth led him to Outward Bound - an organization dedicated to developing young people's self esteem and appreciation for the Earth.

In 2007, Ibrahim was accepted into the National Urban Fellows program, completing a Masters in Public Administration from Baruch College and a fellowship with SchoolNet where he learned vital product marketing skills. He then joined Green For All to organize the "National Day of Action" resulting in the inclusion of green jobs and environmental policy in the Obama campaign platform. In college, Ibrahim was an all-star linebacker, Political Science major, and finalist for the prestigious NCAA scholar-athlete award in 1998. Today, he is the sports contributor on WNYC's nationally syndicated news show, "The Takeaway." He continues to intersect sports, politics, and the environment on his blog, Brooklyn Bedouin.
 
RSVPs welcome, but not required, on Facebook or Meetup.com
LIVING ROOM
Music's Lessons for Mystics: Three Songs and a Talk on Secular Transcendence

Dacey MusicWednesday, May 26, 2010

6 pm Doors, 7 pm Program

Intersections, 274 5th Ave
Btwn 29th and 30th Sts

With Austin Dacey

Co-Sponsored by the
Center for Inqiury, NYC

The experience of the transcendent is often taken as the hallmark of religion. Or is it the hallmark of the human? Must meaningful transcendence of self proceed upwards to touch the divine, or is it better directed outwards to touch truth, beauty, and other persons? In this presentation, secularist philosopher (and amateur musician) Austin Dacey examines music as a model of non-religious, "horizontal" transcendence. Discussing his activities on behalf of censored musicians from around the world, and performing samples from his study of traditional Irish singing, he explores his own favored modes of self-transcendence that keep both feet on the earth.

Austin Dacey is a writer and human rights activist based in New York City. He is the author of The Secular Conscience, and his writings have been published by the New York Times, Washington Post, Dissent, and USA Today. A philosopher by training, he has taught most recently at Marymount Manhattan College. He serves as an adviser to Freemuse: The World Forum on Music and Censorship. In March 2010 he launched The Impossible Music Sessions, a concert series featuring the artists who cannot appear and the music they are not free to make. He is still seeking a percussionist for his new band, The Free Reed Faction.
 
RSVPs welcome, but not required, on Facebook or Meetup.com
In Faith,
 
Bowie Snodgrass, Director
Samir Selmanovic, Founder 
Bara Levitt, Social Justice Intern
 
WHAT'S HAPPENING?
LIVING ROOM Green Deen: What Islam Teaches About Protecting the Planet
LIVING ROOM
Music's Lessons for Mystics: Three Songs and a Talk on Secular Transcendence
FAITH ART
"A Spiritual House"
5/6 Living Room Co-Sponsored by Center for Inquiry
FIND US ONLINE

FAITH ART
"A Spiritual House"
by Deborah Risa Mrantz
Spiritual House
Above: Detail from larger diptych 

1 Peter 2:5 - Genesis 28:20-22

Visit our website for full view & details

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if you would like to share your faith art with the Faith House community.  
5/26 Living Room Co-Sponsored by Center for Inquiry
Center for Inquiry
Our May 26th Living Room with Austin Dacey is Co-Sponsored by the Center for Inquiry, NYC, whose mission is to "foster a secular society based on science, reason, freedom of inquiry, and humanist values." 

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We are an experiential inter-religious community who comes together to deepen our personal and communal journeys, share ritual life and devotional space, and foster a commitment to justice and healing the world.